The Curé of Ars.
SAINT JEAN Baptiste Marie
VIANNEY.
1785-1859.
By Lady Herbert.
AUSTRALIAN CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY No. 643 (1933).
SAINT JEAN B. M. VIANNEY,
Curé of Ars. (1785-1859.)
SAINT
John Mary Vianney.
JEAN BAPTISTE MARIE VIANNEY was born in 1785 at Dardilly, a village not far
from Lyons. His parents were respectable and pious people of the farmer class.
His mother was specially noted for her great and deep religious feeling, and it
was to her teaching that Monsieur Vianney used to say he owed all his holiest
impressions. But from a child the little Jean Marie was noted for his goodness
and his love of God. Prayer was his delight, even at four years old, when,
being one day missed, he was found on his knees in a corner of the stable. His
loving mother would go every morning herself to wake her children, so that she
might make them offer their little hearts to God and to secure that this should
be their first thought. When she saw her little boy’s extraordinary devotion,
her one idea was that he should some day become a priest. But she had many
trials to go through ere this hope could be realised. First came the French
Revolution, which swept away both throne and altar. Their parish church was
closed — their priests exiled or murdered. Few and far between were the blessed
seasons when the faithful were summoned to some carefully-guarded hiding-place,
where Mass was said by some fugitive priest, at the peril of his life and
theirs.
Little Jean Marie was then eight years old, and had the charge of the cows and
sheep on his father’s farm, leading them out every day to browse in the fields
near his home. Our Lord made this the school in which the boy, like another Saint
Vincent de Paul, was trained for the interior life. He became also a little
apostle among his companions, to whom he would often speak of devotion to the
Blessed Virgin, and, having placed a little picture of her against a willow
tree (which is still shown), he would frequently say a “Hail Mary,” and was
never so happy as when he could induce the other shepherd-boys to do the same.
Next to God, Jean Marie loved
the poor. His parents were most kind and hospitable, and his greatest delight
was to help his mother to prepare their beds or their food, and to deny himself
every little delicacy to add to their store. If some were children like
himself, he would gather them round the fire, and coax them by pious stories to
listen to him and to make acts of faith, hope, and charity, and this was done
so humbly and simply that none took offence, and many were touched to the heart
by his words. Owing to the troubled state of the times, he did not make his
first Communion till he was eleven years old, being prepared for it by some
pious Sisters of the Order of Saint Charles, who had taken refuge in the
neighbouring parish of Ecully, where his grandfather was then living. From that
moment, he seemed to increase every day in fervour and piety, yet without ever
neglecting his home duties. His obedience became a by-word in the family, so
that his mother used to set him as an example to the rest. In the midst of the
hard work he often had to do, he never lost the habit of interior prayer, nor
his sense of the continual presence of God. He would often say later:
“When
I was alone in the fields ploughing or sowing I would pray aloud, but when
others were with me I used to pray in my heart. Oh, those were happy days! I
often used to say to myself, as I struck my hoe or my spade into the ground: ‘So
I must cultivate my soul, to pluck up the evil weeds and to prepare it for the
good seed of the good God’.”
At last, the Revolution was at
an end: the priests who remained returned to their flocks; and Ecully joyfully
received back one of these confessors of the Faith, the Abbé Balley, who had
often ministered to them during the days of terror at the peril of his life.
His first care was to collect the boys and young men in his parish, and it was
not long before he found out the holiness of Jean Marie. The sight of this holy
priest at the altar made the deepest impression on the lad, and his longing to
be able to devote himself body and soul to the glory of God and the good of
souls increased daily. At last, he opened his heart to the Abbé Balley, who
encouraged him in every way; while so much was he beloved at Dardilly that all
the neighbours offered to share in the expense of his education: His parents
gladly gave their consent; but then a terrible difficulty arose. His education
had been entirely neglected: he knew no science but that of the saints: his
conception was slow and his memory unretentive. Sometimes he would be entirely
disheartened. But one day the bright idea struck him to go on foot, asking alms
as he went, to the tomb of Saint John Francis Regis, and there to ask for the
power of learning enough to become a priest. His faith was rewarded, and the grace
was obtained in a way which astonished both his masters and himself. All seemed
to augur success in his vocation, when a new and a terrible blow fell upon him.
It was in the autumn of 1809;
Napoleon’s wars had exhausted the youth of France; a fresh conscription was
ordered, and Jean Marie, although inscribed on the list of students for the
priesthood, found himself compelled to serve in the army, and was ordered to
join his regiment at Bayonne. The grief of his family and friends may be
imagined. Every effort was made in vain to find him a substitute. He alone kept
up his courage and tried to submit cheerfully to the will of God. On his way to
Bayonne, he was taken so ill that he was placed in the Lyons hospital, and
afterwards under the care of the Sisters of Saint Augustine at Roanne. There he
so far recovered as to be appointed to join a detachment then forming to join
the army in Spain. On the way, a stranger came up to him and asked him why he
looked so sad. Jean Marie told him his story; and the stranger begged him to
follow him through the woods and mountain paths, till he brought him to a
lonely house, where he was kindly welcomed by a newly-married couple who gave
him food and shelter, while his guide suddenly and mysteriously disappeared.
The next day he was taken to a village called Noes, where he was kindly
received and carefully concealed by a woman named Fayot, whom he spoke of later
as one of the most beautiful souls he had ever known. Here he opened a school,
having changed his name to that of Jerome, to conceal himself from the search
of the soldiers.
The painful suspense of his
parents as to his fate was at last relieved by the good widow Fayot herself,
who went to Ecully to see them and assure them of his safety. In 1810, his
younger brother volunteered to take his place, and the exchange was accepted,
so that after fourteen months absence he was able to return to his beloved
studies. He was so much beloved at Noes that everyone in the place insisted on
contributing something towards his outfit — one giving him a cassock, another
table-napkins, and the like. Soon after his return, he was sent to the little
Seminary of Verrieres to go through his course of philosophy. Here he had much
to suffer from his fellow students, who, seeing that in intellectual
acquirements he was their inferior, treated him as a simpleton. But his
masters, though at first they had failed to appreciate the noble qualities of
their slow and timid student, were soon filled with admiration of his uniform
and constant piety. His companions were not slow to make the same discovery,
and, conscious of their previous injustice, did all in their power to show
their love for and appreciation of him. In 1813, he began his study of theology
under his old friend, Abbé Balley; but when the moment of his examination came,
his memory became a blank, and he made such incoherent replies that the
examiners summarily dismissed him. Abbé Balley went at once to the Superior of
the seminary and entreated him to come next day, with the Vicar-General, and
examine his pupil in private. The result was most satisfactory, and he was at
once admitted to the great Seminary of Saint Irenaeus to prepare for Holy
Orders.
When the time for his
ordination drew near, however, the same difficulty arose. Jean Marie, in spite
of the humility, sweetness, and piety which had won the esteem of all, was
sadly deficient in the learning usually required for candidates for the priesthood.
Again, Abbé Balley sought an interview with the Vicar-General, Monsignor
Courbon, who administered the diocese in the absence of the Archbishop,
Cardinal Fesch, and who was remarkable for his discernment of character. On
hearing from all his superiors that, whatever might be his deficiency in
learning, he was a model of piety, he at once exclaimed, “That is enough. I
will receive him — Divine Grace will do the rest.” He was accordingly ordained
sub-deacon at Lyons by the Bishop of Grenoble, deacon the July following, and
six months after was ordained priest at the same place. This was on the 9th of
August, 1815, he being then twenty-nine years of age.
His first appointment was as
curate to his old friend and master, Abbé Balley, with whom he remained for two
years till the death of this venerable priest, of whom Father Vianney wrote:
“He died like the saint he was; and his pure soul departed to add new joy to
Paradise.” The people of Ecully tried hard to obtain Father Vianney as his
successor, but he steadily refused, alleging his own unworthiness. Three months
later, he was appointed Curé of Ars, a little village in the Department of
Trévoux.
The peasants in this place were
in a state of the utmost ignorance and spiritual poverty. How was their new
pastor to win their hearts and bring them to a better state of mind? He had but
two weapons: one, incessant prayer; the other, the fervent preaching of the
word of God. To this, he added the tenderest charity; so that each one of his
flock felt he was loved and cared for. His great desire was to establish in his
church the perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament: but where was he to
find adorers? At last, he found a few faithful souls who were willing to join
him. First, the lady who lived in the chateau, or big house of the place, Mademoiselle
d’Ars, whose time was divided between prayer and the care of the poor and sick.
Then a simple peasant joined them, who, whether going to his work or returning
from it, never failed to go into the church and adore his Lord. Father Vianney
once asked him what he said when he knelt before the Tabernacle. “I say
nothing,” the old man replied; “but I look at Him and He looks at me!” Then
came a poor widow named Bibot and a Madame Pignaut, who had come from Lyons to
be under Father Vianney’s pastoral care. Thus a little group was formed, who
began the day with Holy Mass and ended it with night prayers and the Rosary
said in common. Very soon, other members of the congregation followed the good
example; and, to the joy of the good Curé, all the village came at last, after
their day’s work, for half an hour’s prayer before going to bed.
To encourage them in more
frequent Communion, to stop Sunday labour and to induce the young girls in the
parish to join in a Confraternity of the Rosary were the next objects of his
zeal; in all of these he way eminently successful. Then came the decoration of
the neglected parish church, in which he was greatly assisted by the Vicomte d’Ars,
who sent him a splendid tabernacle, candlesticks, and reliquaries for his new
altar. To show his joy and gratitude, he and all his flock made a pilgrimage to
Notre Dame de Fourvieres at Lyons. Then he built various small chapels: one
dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, his patron; the next, to Saint Philomena .
. . his “dear little saint,” as he called her; who obtained everything by her
prayers, and to whom he attributed all the graces and wonders which were done
at Ars.
After five years in the parish,
Father Vianney was appointed to the parish of Saller, an important place in the
Beaujolais. He did not refuse to go, but still most earnestly wished to remain
in his obscure village. Thrice he packed his poor furniture for departure, and
thrice the inundation of the Saone rendered it impossible. In the meantime, his
flock redoubled their prayers and remonstrances to the Bishop and the
Vicar-General, and at last, they were persuaded to cancel the appointment and leave
the beloved Curé in peace.
From that time till his death, Father
Vianney never left his parish, save to assist neighbouring priests occasionally
in giving missions and retreats. In one that he gave at Trévoux, in 1823, the
number of conversions was so great that he was beset with similar applications;
but he accepted such work only when he could do so without neglecting his
beloved parishioners at Ars.
In 1825, he began an important work in his parish, which was the founding of an
asylum for orphan and destitute girls, which he called “La Providence.” To
purchase a house for this purpose he sold all he had in the world and
anticipated all he received from his living. He placed it under the care of two
very pious women whom he had himself trained in obedience, humility,
simplicity, and absolute dependence on God — Benoite Lardet and Catherine
Lassagne. They began in the utmost poverty, without even bread, but, trusting
in Divine Providence, their wants were, one by one, supplied. Soon the number
of the orphans increased to such a degree that the house had to be enlarged.
The Curé became at once architect, mason, and carpenter — he made the mortar,
cut the stones and carried them with his own hands; so that, fired with a like
zeal, the whole parish came to help in the work. Over and over again, food was
miraculously multiplied in answer to his prayers; his granary was filled with
corn and his cellar with wine; while money poured in from the most unexpected
quarters and always at the moment of his greatest need. The type upon which he
had founded his Home was rather that of a poor and pious family than of a
charitable institution. It embraced none of the modern systems of learning; but
the girls were taught to write and sum, besides needlework and knitting, the
rest of the time being filled up by household duties.
The Curé gave them catechetical instruction every day himself, speaking to them
of the chief truths of faith and, above all, of the fear and love of God. These
little instructions have been collected by his old friend, the Abbé Monnin, and
are models of beautiful and touching teaching on the Sacraments, on the
practice of certain special virtues, and the sweetness of the Real Presence.
We have said nothing yet of the heroic life of the Curé d’Ars. There are few
even among the saints whose daily lives bear the mark of a more systematic and
unflinching crucifixion of the whole man, a more uniform practice of both
exterior and interior mortification, than we find in the portrait traced of him
by those most familiar with the details of his really supernatural existence.
His ordinary food consisted of some pieces of black bread, or some potatoes,
which he boiled for himself once a week. In vain, did his pious housekeeper or
any friend make him some little delicacy; it went instantly to the poor and
sick. He had at first a straw palliasse on his bed, but, finding that too
luxurious, he slept latterly on the floor with a stone for his pillow. His
whole day, with very short exceptions, was spent in the church, and he rarely
allowed himself more than two or three hours’ sleep. When his confessional
became so crowded that from midnight the people were waiting for their turn, he
reduced the already small amount of rest allowed his worn-out body. As to his
clothes, though particular as to cleanliness, he never would have more than one
cassock, which he wore till it was in rags; his hat was shapeless and his boots
were guiltless of blacking. Yet, in this guise, he would attend ecclesiastical
conferences and other clerical meetings, and, in answer to the raillery of his
companions, would reply: “What I have got on is quite good enough for the Curé
d’Ars,” thus adding humiliation to mortification.
The sufferings inflicted on him
by the devil were added to those which he so mercilessly waged upon his poor
body, and for years interrupted the little sleep which he had allowed himself.
His biographer states that this persecution went on, with more or less
violence, for a period of thirty years. Not only were horrible noises heard,
which alarmed everyone who came to the house, but terrible doubts of his
salvation, fear of hell, and other spiritual conflicts were added to his physical
tortures. Yet what must have been the courage of a man who could hold out,
night after night, against this continual, sensible pressure of the powers of
evil, and return to his daily labour for souls with a brow so unruffled and a
voice as calm and soothing as if none but ministering angels had been suffered
to come near his bed! His brother priests often laughed at him for these
“hallucinations,” as they called them; and some went so far as to treat him as
a visionary and a maniac. One evening, when he was giving a retreat at Saint
Trivier-sur-Moignans, this raillery took a bitter tone. “Your presbytery,” they
said, “is nothing better than an old barn; the rats are quite at home there,
and you take them for devils!” The holy Curé said nothing, but retired to his
room rejoicing in humiliation. That very night, however, the scoffers were
rudely awakened by a fearful noise. The presbytery seemed upside down, the
walls shook as if with an earthquake, while fearful cracks seemed to threaten
to bring down the whole house. Everyone rushed out of bed and to the Curé’s
room, whom they found resting. “Get up,” they cried; “the presbytery is
falling!” “Oh, no,” he replied; “I know very well what it is. Go back to your
beds. There is nothing to fear.” They never after this jested at his nightly
disturbances!
These violent noises almost
always coincided with some wonderful manifestation of Divine Grace in the
conversion of noted sinners: so that the holy Curé accepted the trial patiently
for their sakes. One day, when there was a great celebration of the Forty Hours’
Adoration at Ars, a strong smell of burning pervaded the place, and it was
found that the humble bed and all the furniture of the Curé’s room were burnt,
including the few poor holy pictures round his bed; yet the floor remained
unscathed, though, being old wood, it would have caught fire instantly had the
conflagration been a natural one. The Curé, as it happened, had been all night
in adoration. When told of the event, he said, laughing: “As he could not burn the
man, he has consoled himself by burning his bed. Today I think I am the poorest
man in the parish. They all have beds, and now, thank God! I have none.”
Somebody having begun to pity him, he answered, quickly: “Oh, there is less
harm in this than in the slightest venial sin.”
But it was not only the evil
spirit who was permitted thus to torment him. The Curé d’Ars would have wanted
one essential mark of sanctity if this persecution had not been accompanied by
the dislike and misrepresentations of even good men. He bore his trial for more
than eight years; but he lived it down. A meeting had been held by the most
influential clergy in the neighbourhood, who resolved to make a formal
complaint to the new Bishop of Belley “of the imprudent zeal and mischievous
enthusiasm of this ignorant and foolish Curé.” Monsignor Devie sent his
Vicar-General to Ars to inquire into the whole matter, who returned edified and
delighted with all he had seen and heard. “I wish you, gentlemen, a little of
that folly at which you scoff. It would do no harm to your supposed wisdom.”
Such was the verdict of the good and holy Bishop after a most minute inquiry.
Never during that terrible trial did word or look betray what Father Vianney
suffered, or mar the serenity of his face. Believing himself to be deserving of
all the blame cast upon him, he always expected to be ignominiously dismissed
from his position as Curé.
Yet he worked on just as hard
and just as calmly. To a priest who one day came to complain of the wearisome
and unjust persecution to which he was subjected, he replied: “My friend, do as
I do. Let them say all they have to say; then there will be no more to be said,
and they will be silent.” He practised to the letter the maxim so often on his
lips: “The saints never complain.” When asked how he could possibly, under the
continual threatening of dismissal and amidst the wearing vexation of this
strife of tongues, have preserved his energy and the self-command necessary to
labour on with unabated ardour and perseverance, he replied: “We do much more
for God when we do the same things without pleasure or satisfaction.” To the
jealousy and calumnies of the good were added the bitter enmity of the bad, who
dared to accuse this man, an example of the most austere penance and modest
gravity, of being a vile hypocrite and of leading an evil and scandalous life.
When someone was expressing his indignation at such imputations on his spotless
purity, he answered:
“I am
sorry that God should be offended: but, on the other hand. I rejoice in all
that is said against me, because the condemnation of the world is the
benediction of God. I was afraid of being a hypocrite when people were making
some account of me; and I am very glad to see that unfounded estimation of me
turned into contempt.”
Thus did his humility defeat
every wile of the devil. It was at this very time that the concourse of
pilgrims to Ars began to increase in so wonderful a manner. His great miracles
and his great works (supported by abundant alms) date also from this period.
But this faithful disciple of
his Divine Master was to drink the draught of His own chalice — that
dereliction of soul which is the heaviest of all trials to one who loves God
with his whole heart. The Abbé Baux, who was his confessor for many years,
affirms that his soul was habitually subject to the bitterest desolation. Our
Lord hid from him the immense good which He was working by his means. He
honestly believed himself to be utterly useless and devoid of piety,
understanding, knowledge, discernment, or virtue. “He was continually haunted,”
writes his great friend, Abbé Monnin, “by confusion for past faults and by
fears of faults to come; and by the constant dread he had of doing ill on every
occasion.” “I have no resource against temptations to despair,” he once said,
“but to throw myself before the Tabernacle, like a little dog at his master’s
feet.”
His intense appreciation of the
sanctity required of the ministers of the sanctuary was another source of
suffering. Speaking one day of the difficulty of corresponding with a true
priest’s vocation, he exclaimed:
“Ah,
to say Mass one ought to be a seraph. If we really knew what Mass is, we should
die! We shall never understand how blessed a thing it is to say Mass till we
are in heaven. How pitiable is the state of that priest who does this as an
ordinary thing! There are some who have begun well and said Mass devoutly for
some months; and afterwards . . . .” Here his voice was choked with tears. “Oh,
when we consider what it is that our Great God has entrusted to us, miserable
creatures that we are! . . . What does the mischief, is all this worldly news,
this conversation, these politics, these newspapers. We fill our heads with
them: then we go and say our Mass or our Office. . . . . . We do not enter
enough into ourselves: we do not know what we are doing. What we want is more
reflection, more prayer, more union with God. Oh, how unhappy is a priest who
is not interior! . . . One of our great misfortunes is that our souls become
callous. At first, we are deeply moved at the state of those who do not love
God. At last, we come to say: ‘These people do their duty well, so much the
better: these others keep away from the Sacraments, so much the worse!’ and we
do nothing — neither more nor less — in consequence.”
“Ah!”
he continued, “there is no one in this world so unhappy, very often, as a
priest. In what does he pass his life? In beholding the good God offended; His
Holy Name blasphemed; His commandments continually violated; His love
continually outraged. The priest is like Saint Peter in the praetorium of
Pilate. He has always before his eyes his Lord insulted, despised, mocked,
covered with ignominy. It is horrible. If only God were less good! But He is so
good! What will be our shame when the Day of Judgment discovers to us our ingratitude!
We shall then understand it; but it will be too late.”
In spite of all these mental
and bodily sufferings, however, there was no outward indication of the conflict
within, so great was the strength and the patience with which he possessed his
soul.
The pilgrimage to Ars, which,
for a period of thirty years, seemed to bring back a scene from the days of Saint
Bernard to the unbelieving nineteenth century, began shortly after the
foundation of the “Providence” asylum. “Divine Providence,” wrote Monsieur Leon
Aubineau, “so ordered it that men and women enamoured of all kinds of vanities
should come in crowds to this out-of-the-way village to do homage to humility
and simplicity. While the philosophers of our day are all inveighing against
Confession and its consequences, the people have replied by flocking to Ars to
venerate a confessor!”
Persons of the highest rank and most refined and luxurious habits were content to be ill-lodged, ill-fed, to rise at daylight or before, to be squeezed, elbowed, repulsed; braving cold, hunger, thirst, fatigue, want of sleep and all to catch a few words from the holy Curé. They would not have done as much for any king or queen.
In 1835, it was found necessary to organise a regular system of public
conveyances from Lyons to Ars, and of steamboats on the Saone. Father Vianney
soon arrived at that state to which Saint Philip Neri bound himself by vow — never
to have an hour or a moment to himself. From that year, he was dispensed by the
Bishop from the usual pastoral retreat. “You have no need of a retreat,” said
the Bishop; “and there are souls at Ars which have urgent need of you.” Abbé Monnin
states that, even in 1848, the number of the pilgrims amounted to 80,000 in the
course of the year, and they went on steadily increasing. They were admitted to
his confessional each in his turn; but Father Vianney would sometimes call out
of the crowd such as, by the supernatural light vouchsafed to him, he perceived
to be in most urgent need of spiritual succour. No other claim of precedence
was allowed.
It was this daily and
unremitting labour for souls which constituted the real miracle of the life of Father
Vianney, which was, in fact, passed in the confessional. Of the twenty-two
hours he gave to labour, he reserved only time to say his Mass and Office and
to snatch the semblance of a meal at midday. Two hours only were given to
sleep. At one o’clock in the morning he was in his confessional in the chapel
of Saint John the Baptist till six or seven o’clock, according to the season,
when he left it to prepare to say Mass. So closely did the crowd press upon him
that it was necessary to clear a passage for him whenever he stirred. After
Mass, be blessed the various objects of piety which were presented to him,
drank a little milk which had been brought to him in the sacristy, and then
heard the confessions of forty or fifty men who had been waiting all night. At
ten o’clock, he closed the sacristy door and said his Office, kneeling on the
floor without any support. When that had been done, he went to a little room
under the belfry, where he confessed the sick or those who could not wait any
longer at Ars. At eleven o’clock, he catechised. As he went down from the
pulpit, the throng was thicker than ever. At twelve, he went to his poor
dinner, the people watching for him at every outlet from the house. At
half-past twelve he went to the “Providence” on parish business, or to visit
the sick. Then he returned to the church, said Vespers on his knees and went
back to his confessional till night.
It might have been supposed
that labours so incessant and absorbing would have prevented him from giving
his full attention to each soul in particular. Nothing could be farther from
the truth. There was not one of his penitents who might not have believed him
or her self to be the object of his special solicitude. He had that great art
and wisdom which enables a man to concentrate his whole mind on the present
moment; so that amidst the overwhelming pressure of such a multitude of people,
he listened to the penitent at his feet as if he had nothing else to do or to
think of. Such for thirty years was the life of the Curé of Ars. A man of the
world wrote not long ago: “People speak of the miracles at Ars; but the
greatest of all was the laborious and penitential life of Father Vianney. That
a man could do what he did, and do it every day, without ever growing weary or
sinking under it, is what surpasses all human comprehension. This is to me the
miracle of miracles.”
In the beginning of May 1843,
however, he was seized with an illness which threatened to be his last. The
concourse of pilgrims in May had been immense, and at length even his giant
strength gave way. He had previously been attacked by the fever which was so
prevalent in the unhealthy atmosphere of the district, and was ever afterwards
subject to acute headaches, which he bore with his accustomed calm and
cheerfulness; but this time his health gave way so completely that the Last
Sacraments were administered to him. The despair and desolation of his flock
may be imagined. Then he begged that a Mass might be said for him at the altar
of Saint Philomena, when he fell into a peaceful slumber, which was the
precursor of his perfect recovery. He attributed his cure entirely, under God,
to the intercession of his “dear little saint,” as he called her. A profound
terror of the judgments of God and an intense fear of death characterised this
first severe illness of the holy Curé; but when the hour of the departure
really came, sixteen years later, there was no trace of this fear, which had
then given place to the simple trustfulness of a little child sinking to rest
in its mother’s arms.
On his recovery, the Bishop insisted on his accepting a coadjutor, and
appointed Father Raymond, the Curé of Savigneux, to assist him. But Father
Vianney no sooner saw him installed than he thought he might now leave his work
in better hands than his own, and that Divine Providence had thus interfered to
set him free to follow the long-cherished wish of his heart for perfect
solitude; or, as he expressed it, “to weep over his own poor sins, so that God
might perchance have mercy on him.” He had run away once, three years before,
one very dark night, when an interior voice called him back to Ars. Now,
however, on the plea of health, he went back to his old home at Dardilly, on
foot and by wayside paths, lest he should be pursued and forcibly brought back.
The whole parish was in utter
consternation. His flock followed him to Dardilly, so that he felt he must seek
some other refuge. In the meanwhile, the Bishop positively forbade him to leave
his diocese and begged him to go with Father Raymond and make a pilgrimage to
the chapel of Beaumont, an ancient sanctuary of Our Lady. They went into the
church to say their Office when they arrived; and, on rising from their knees
to go out, found, to their astonishment, that the whole church was filled. Father
Raymond told him that he could not do less than say a few words to these poor
people, on which the Curé began to speak to them on the love of God, and his
voice, which had been so weak since his illness, was restored to him, so that
he could be heard by the whole church. The next morning they both said Mass;
and, during his thanksgiving, Father Vianney, turning to his companion, said,
suddenly: “Let us return to Ars!”
His flock were overjoyed. The
labourer left his work, the thresher threw down his flail, the women ran out of
their houses. At last, a cry arose: “Here is our Saint!” and his children
crowded round him, struggling which should be the first to get his blessing, to
touch his cassock, to kiss his feet. He went straight to the church and said
the evening prayers, amid the joyful and grateful tears of the people. Like his
Divine Master, the Curé d’Ars having fled from the applause of men, returned to
consummate his sacrifice.
Once more, however, was the temptation to escape to come over him, for he always felt and said “that it was a fearful thing to pass from the cure of souls to the tribunal of God.”
He had raised funds for the foundation of a society of missionaries, which was
established at Pont d’Ain, and which enabled missions to be preached in ninety
parishes of the diocese. Monsignor Devie’s greatest wish was to connect this
house with Ars, so that the example of the holy Curé should be continually
before the eyes of his young priests. This design was carried out by his
successor, Monsignor Chalandon, who, in 1853, appointed Abbé Toccanier, one of
the missionaries at Pont d’Ain, to go to Ars and assist Father Vianney.
Here was a favourable opportunity for the good Curé to put, as he expressed it,
“a better man in his place.” The serious illness of his brother gave him the
pretext, and, in spite of the efforts of his flock, he again set out in a
carriage provided for the purpose. But he had scarcely started when he was
seized with a most unusual feeling of fatigue. He got out of the carriage to
get some fresh air, and tried to walk, but in vain. Abbé Toccanier, who was
with him, offered to go on to his brother and replace him. Father Vianney
accepted, and no sooner had he turned his horse’s head towards Ars than all
feelings of weakness and illness disappeared. He was met by the omnibus from
Lyons, full of pilgrims, some of whom had not been to confession for forty
years.
“You see,” said his friend, “that the good God stopped you Himself this time,
to bring you back to the work so dear to Him — the saving of souls.” Father
Vianney smiled, but the lesson had not been lost upon him. He now understood
that what he had fancied was an inspiration, was, in fact, a temptation; and
never again strove to leave the path which God had so visibly pointed out to
him.
The celebrity which became so keen a suffering to this humble and holy man of God increased as time went on, and was the more extraordinary from the fact that it rested on his sanctity alone. One distinguished pilgrim exclaimed: “He is the very model of that childlike spirit which Jesus loved; and, therefore, it is that God is with him.” Another, a celebrated poet, was so struck by his appearance that he involuntarily said out aloud, “I have never seen God so near.” “True, my friend,” instantly said Father Vianney, pointing to the Blessed Sacrament exposed on the altar, “God is not far from us; we have Him there, in the sanctuary of His love.”
Not only eminent laymen from all parts of the world flocked to his
confessional, but Bishops and Princes of the Church. Among these was Monsignor
Dupanloup, who came filled with fear on receiving the burden of the episcopate.
“There are many Bishops in the calendar of saints,” replied Father Vianney,
“but hardly any curés. Judge, Monseigneur, whether you have as much cause to
tremble as I!”
In May, 1854, the Bishop of
Birmingham, Doctor Ullathorne, came, and has left a graphic account of the
extraordinary impression the Curé produced upon him. He was speaking of prayer
for England, and of the sufferings of our poorer Catholics on account of their
Faith, while the Curé was listening, his eyes nearly closed; when, all of a
sudden, he opened them wide, and, fixing them on the Bishop with extraordinary
brilliancy, exclaimed in a tone of confident assurance: “I believe and am sure
that the Church in England will return again to its ancient splendour!”
Père Lacordaire paid him a
visit the previous year, and listened in silent reverence to the words and
advice of the holy Curé. When Father Vianney heard who it was, he exclaimed:
“That which is greatest in science is come to humble itself to what is least in
ignorance; the two extremes have met.” He had the greatest dislike to having
his portrait taken, and, on one occasion, when a very holy painter came with a
letter from the Bishop, to beg for a sitting, he replied: “Willingly — provided
Monseigneur will permit me to leave the place directly afterwards!” The poor
artist was compelled to catch the likeness by stealth, and that with difficulty.
Among the marks of honour he
received was the dignity of Canon conferred upon him by Monsignor Chalandon,
and the Cross of the Legion of Honour, sent to him by the Emperor. He never
wore his Canon’s dress except at the ceremony of his reception by the Chapter;
and, as to the Cross, all he said was: “I can’t conceive what made the Emperor
send me this, except for having been once a deserter!” He had opened the case
containing it, supposing it was a relic or something for his church; and his
look of blank disappointment was well remembered, as he said: “It’s nothing but
this, after all.”
We have said nothing of Father
Vianney’s personal appearance. He was rather short, and, though not devoid of
vigour, yet his whole frame indicated a highly nervous temperament. Up to the
last, his hearing retained its acuteness, his sight its keenness, his mind its
clearness and his memory its freshness, and that up to the very day of his
death. Yet his body had reached such a degree of extenuation as to seem almost
transparent. His head fell slightly forward on his breast, from the habit of
recollection and adoration. His hair fell thick and long, like a white aureole,
round his head.
On that emaciated face there was no token of aught earthly or human; it bore
the impress of divine grace alone. The eyes alone betokened life; they shone
with exceeding lustre. There was a kind of supernatural fire in Father Vianney’s
glance, which continually varied in intensity and expression. That glance
dilated and sparkled when he spoke of the love of God, while the thought of sin
veiled it with a mist of tears. It was by turns sweet and piercing, terrible
and loving, child-like and profound. It was a very furnace of tenderness and
compassion when fixed upon anyone. It had that mysterious power of attraction
bestowed by Our Lord upon those closely united to Himself; and, wonderful to
say, that glance, which searched all hearts, never frightened anyone. Without
thinking or knowing it, this man, so weak in bodily presence, drew to himself
all who came near him and within the sphere of his influence. Once to meet his
eye, or hear his voice, was to be fascinated by him for ever. Men of the world
have acknowledged that after they had seen the Curé d’Ars, his image seemed to
haunt them and his resemblance to follow them wherever they went, so vivid was the
impression of his sanctity.
Next to his eyes, the most
remarkable thing in the face of the Curé d’Ars was his profile, the lines of
which were bold, harmonious and well defined. Although the sweetness and
serenity of his face betokened the divine peace which dwelt within him, yet his
characteristic expression, when at rest, was a kind of supernatural sadness.
But when he came forth from his habitual state of recollection to converse with
men, it was a bright and gracious smile which was ever ready to respond to
every look turned upon him. In fact, there was not one of his features which
then did not seem to smile. In conversation, he was gentle, cheerful and even
playful. The spirit of God which dwelt within him gave to his lightest word an
incomparable sweetness fitness and simplicity. As he always said, the people
say of others now and then, “do the right thing in the right way.” When Monsignor
Chalandon came for his visitation, he met him with the words:
“Monseigneur,
the days on which your holy predecessor visited our parish were days of
benediction, and no wonder, for where the saints pass, God passes with them. We
have lost nothing, Monseigneur: on the contrary, we have gained, for Monseigneur
Devie still blesses us from heaven, and you, whom he chose to carry on his
work, bless us on earth. Bless us, Monseigneur; bless the pastor, bless the
flock, that we may always, and altogether, dearly love our good God.”
To Monsignor de Langalerie, who
said to him: “My good Curé, will you kindly permit me to say Mass in your
church?” he at once replied: “Monseigneur, I am only sorry that it is not
Christmas, that you might say three.”
At the end of the long procession on Corpus Christi, one of his friends wanted him to take some food. He refused, saying: “I do not need it. How should I be tired? I have been bearing Him Who bears me.”
A religious once said to him, with great simplicity:
“Father,
people believe generally that you are very ignorant.”
“They are quite right, my child,” he replied; “but it does not matter. I can
teach you more than you will practise.”
We might multiply such speeches were we not afraid of exceeding the space
allotted to us.
It is a difficult task to preserve perfect tranquillity amidst incessant
activity; recollection amidst the most absorbing exterior labours; entire
sweetness and self-possession and constant union with God in the midst of
hurry, noise, and an undue pressure of work. But the Curé d’Ars rose superior
to this trial. At whatever moment he might be seen — surrounded, pressed,
assailed by the indiscreet multitude; harassed by absurd and idle questions;
tormented by impossible requests; called hither and thither; intercepted
whichever way he turned; not knowing how or whom to answer first — he was
always himself, never irritable or impatient, always gracious, always amiable,
always compassionate, always ready to yield and grant everything to all with a
sweet, calm, and smiling countenance. It was impossible to detect a cloud on
his brow, or the slightest shade of annoyance or discontent; still less did
anyone ever hear a word of reproach or complaint from his lips. Again, when,
towards the last years of his life, he was surrounded by the most clamorous and
unrestrained tokens of respect, confidence, admiration, and veneration;
applauded, followed, borne in triumph by the multitude; when he saw them
haunting his steps, hanging on his words, kneeling for his blessing — still he
was the same; simple, modest, humble, ingenuous as a child; never seeming for a
moment to suspect that his own sanctity had anything whatever to do with this
extraordinary concourse, or with the miracles acclaimed by so many tongues.
Another remarkable feature in
his sanctity was his extraordinary consistency. Most men have their good and
bad days; their hour of weakness, irritability or the like. With him, it was
otherwise. He was watched day and night, day after day, week after week, and he
was never known or seen to act but in the most perfect manner. In all he did,
he combined the utmost purity of intention with the greatest intensity of
fervour, so that it was impossible for those about him to find an instance in
which he might have done better what he had in hand. The tender and considerate
kindness, which was one of his striking characteristics, sprang, in part, from
his total self-forgetfulness. He, who never sought for sympathy under the
severest sufferings of mind and body, gave all he had to those around him,
especially to the poor, the weak, the ignorant and the sinful. He was as
sensitively careful of and anxious for the health of his missionaries as he was
sternly regardless of his own. “On one of my first Sundays,” writes Abbé Toccanier,
“he remarked that I coughed at vespers. What was my astonishment to see him
come in to me, after night prayers, through a violent storm, with his little
lantern in his hand, and say: ‘My dear friend, I fear you have a bad cough.
Stay in bed tomorrow morning. I will say the first Mass in your place and
catechize the children’.”
To buy for one a warm cloak, for another an umbrella, and for a third some other material comfort, were daily proofs of this tender consideration of those about him which was carried into all the most insignificant details of daily life. He never sat down in the presence of others, nor allowed others to stand in his own. How could anyone help loving a man who was himself so full of love? It was not by alms that he won all hearts, but by his loving tenderness and sympathy; by the active and heartfelt interest which he took in others. With the growth of his interior life, his solicitude for his neighbour seemed to develop day by day.
Of the theological virtues of Faith, Hope, and Charity, we have given already
sufficient examples in the holy Curé’s life. During Mass, he seemed actually to
see Our Lord, and when the Blessed Sacrament was exposed, the expression on his
face was such that it riveted the attention of all who saw him. He had received
the gift of prayer in a super-eminent degree, together with a constant
realisation of the presence of God. Yet he had not the smallest affectation or
singularity in his devotions, and deprecated any posture in church which might
attract attention.
“Father Vianney,” wrote one of
his biographers, “had but one thought — to love God and to make Him be loved by
others. Always God’s work — never the slightest admixture of his own. Never did
he allow himself the most trifling relaxation and never an instant’s respite.”
“It is impossible to conceive,” wrote Catherine Lassagne, “how much Monsieur le
Curé had at heart the salvation of souls.” He laboured and wept for them by
day; he suffered for them by night. To satisfy his burning charity and
insatiable liberality, he would sell all he possessed, even to his clothes. “We
should never repulse the poor,” he would say. “If we cannot really give them
anything, let us pray that someone else may be inspired to do so. People scold
me and say: ‘They will make a bad use of their money.’ Let them make what use
of it they will. They will have to answer for the use they make of your alms;
but you will have to answer for not giving it if you can.” Money, however,
poured in to him from all quarters, and not only money, but food and wine were
miraculously supplied to him on several occasions. When he wanted to make a foundation,
he would simply pray to Our Lady or one of the saints: “If this work be
pleasing to you, send me the means to carry it out,” and his simple faith was
invariably rewarded. The sum he received for the single work of the mission amounted
to 200,000 francs; and this was only one of the many great works he was permitted
to accomplish. To a priest, who was in despair for money to finish his church,
he said: “My secret is very simple — it is only to pray, and when you have
obtained what you have asked for, to give everything and keep nothing.”
Of the austerity of his life,
we have already spoken, as also of the severity of his bodily sufferings; but
he mortified himself in a hundred little ways besides. He would never smell a
flower, never drink when parched with thirst, never brush off a fly, never
appear to be conscious of an unpleasant smell, never express disgust at any
repulsive sight, never complain of anything whatever which affected him
personally, never lean against anything when kneeling, and so on. He suffered
terribly from cold; but would never take any means to preserve himself from it,
and once, during a very severe winter, both his feet were frozen.
Love, humility, poverty,
mortification — these were the links of the chain which carried this marvellous
soul to heaven. He would often say: “We have nothing of our own but our will,
and a single act of renunciation of that is more pleasing to God than fasts or
disciplines.”
“Even in the world we may at all times find opportunities for this renunciation. We can deprive ourselves of a visit which would give us pleasure: we can perform some distasteful work of charity: we can go to rest a little later or get up a little earlier. Of the two things to be done, we can choose that which is the least pleasant to us. It is this which makes saints.”
“Who was your master in theology?” was once ironically asked of the Curé d’Ars.
“I had the same Master as Saint Peter,” he replied with the utmost simplicity.
His faith, in fact, was the only source of his science — his only book, Our
Lord Jesus Christ. He spoke without any other preparation than his habitual
recollection in God and with that perfect self-possession which arose from
entire forgetfulness of self. He thought only of the souls before him, and made
them think only of God. This stood him instead of any great talent or rhetoric,
and gave to the simplest words he uttered a singular power and irresistible
authority. “It was his whole being that preached,” wrote the Abbé Monnin, “and
the power and energy of his words struck home to his hearers even without the
beauty of imagery which abounded in his sermons.”
“Those who only heard him in his catechetical instructions,” writes Abbé Monnin,
“only half knew his power. It was in his Sunday discourses that the apostle,
the prophet, the saint, consumed with thirst for the salvation of souls, came
forth in his full power and mastery.”
In the words of Monsignor Devie, “the Curé d’Ars was not learned, but he was
specially enlightened by the spirit of God”; and the extraordinary gift of
illumination with which he was endowed shone forth pre-eminently in his
direction of souls. His singular gift of discernment enabled him to give that
counsel to every person who came to him which proved to be the most conducive
to the perfection of each. One he would advise to enter a religious Order;
another to wait till some home duty had been discharged; he would advise a
third to marry, a fourth to lead a single life in the world, and so on. With
loving playfulness, he would answer one girl who had been pouring out a long
story which he knew by heart: “My child! in which month of the year do you talk
least?” and, as she bit her lips in silence, he added: “It must be the month of
February, because it has three days less in it than any other!”
A parish priest came to him one
day with a very complicated case upon which no one he had hitherto consulted
had been able to throw any light. Father Vianney replied with one word, which
threw so vivid and instantaneous a light on the subject that the priest was
amazed and overjoyed. “Where did you study theology?” he exclaimed. Father
Vianney pointed to his prie-dieu. So great was the estimation in which his
judgment was held, that there was not a charity or religious congregation
founded in France during his life which was not first submitted to him. In this
way, Madame Eugénie Smet [now beatified] laid her plans before him when she was
thinking of starting her congregation for the relief of the souls in Purgatory.
She begged him to pray specially for this project on All Souls’ Day. The holy
Curé remained for some time with his head between his hands. Then he looked up
and said with tears: “This is the work which God has been so long asking for.”
He then dictated a letter to her, which began as follows: “The idea of founding
an Order for the relief of the souls in Purgatory comes directly from the Heart
of Our Lord, Who will bless and prosper it.”
The sketch of this holy man’s
life would be incomplete if we did not say a few words of the miracles which
were worked in answer to his prayers. These were, of course, submitted to
official investigation during the process of his beatification; and they are
attested by too many eyewitnesses to admit of any doubt. The first, in 1838,
was the cure of one of the directresses of the “Providence” who had been
entirely given up by the doctors, and was, in fact, in her agony. The Curé
prayed earnestly to Saint Philomena, and she was instantly restored to health
and strength. A poor soldier had a crippled child, and brought him to the Curé.
“Be consoled,” he said; “your child will be cured.” And the words were hardly
out of his mouth when the boy jumped up and began to walk. A similar cure
occurred with another child, whose mother had travelled many miles to bring him
to Ars, and who for twenty-four hours had hung upon his steps, holding up her
boy with a gesture of such faith and entreaty that no one had the heart to
drive her away. That evening the boy begged his mother to buy him some shoes,
as the Curé had told him he would walk the next day. Full of faith, the poor
woman did so, and was rewarded by seeing her child run to the church, crying
out: “I am cured! I am cured!” The mother only implored to be allowed to thank
him. The Curé was inexorable. Later he was told that he must help her to thank Saint
Philomena, to whom he always attributed all his cures. Then he exclaimed in a
tone of mortification: “Saint Philomena really ought to have cured this little
thing at home!”
Endless tales of the same kind
are recorded; and still more wonderful were the miracles of grace of which he
was the channel. This was emphatically his work, to which the bodily cures
wrought at Ars were but secondary.
A noted atheist was persuaded by a friend to accompany him to Ars. He went from
pure curiosity, believing in nothing. As the Curé passed out of the sacristy to
say his Mass, his eye fell on this man. It was but a glance, but it pierced his
soul. He remained motionless during the Mass; but when the Curé passed again an
invisible force seemed to drag him to follow the priest. The door was closed,
and all the man could say was: “I have a crushing burden on my shoulders!”
“I know it,” replied the Curé, “and you must get rid of it at once. Kneel down
and tell me all your poor life, and Our Lord will take up your burden, for He
has said:
‘Come unto Me, all ye who are heavy laden, and I will refresh you’.”
The man did as he was bid, and opened his whole heart to the good Curé, who
comforted and cheered him, so that he left the sacristy full of faith and hope
and joy; neither did any doubts ever after destroy his peace.
But a volume might be filled with the like conversions, which were continued up
to the very time of his death; for at last, the hour came when this faithful
servant was called to his reward. The intense heat of the month of July, 1859,
had tried him very much, and the church was positively suffocating from the
great crowd which continually filled it. Several times, he fainted away; yet
the moment he recovered, he went back to his confessional. On Wednesday, the 29th
of July, he went through his usual routine of labour, catechising, passing
seventeen hours in the confessional and ending with night prayers. When he
returned home, he sank on a chair, saying, “I can do no more.” He went to bed;
but at one o’clock in the morning, when he tried to rise to go as usual to the
church, he fainted away. Someone came in and exclaimed: “You are ill, Monsieur
le Curé; shall I call someone?”
“No, it is not worth while. I think it is my poor end.” He had foreseen and
foretold his approaching death, and did not speak of saying Mass, which was a
bad sign. He would not, however, submit to the use of a fan, which he
considered a luxury.
“Leave me with my poor flies,” he feebly said.
“You are suffering very much,” said one of the watchers. “We are going to
invoke Saint Philomena with all our might that she may cure you as she did
before.”
“Oh, Saint Philomena will not do so now,” was his only reply.
The consternation was deep and general when Father Vianney’s absence from the
confessional was perceived. The missionaries and the brothers of the Holy
Family watched continually round his bed, while night and day his pillow was
tended by his old and beloved friend, the Comte des Garets. Another of his
parishioners took up his station on the roof of the presbytery, and, under the
burning sun of August, during the whole time of his illness, continued watering
the roofs and walls, to keep up a refreshing coolness around him. On Tuesday
evening, Father Vianney asked for the Last Sacraments; silent tears flowed from
his eyes when the bell announced the last visit of his Lord. A few hours later,
he wept once more, but they were tears of joy. They fell upon the cross of his
Bishop, Monsignor de Langalerie, who came, in breathless agitation, praying
aloud as he forced his way through the kneeling crowd who intercepted his
passage. He was but just in time. At two o’clock in the morning, without
struggle or agony, Jean Baptiste Marie Vianney fell asleep in the Lord, while
the priest was pronouncing the words: “Let the holy angels of God come forth to
meet him, and conduct him to the city of the heavenly Jerusalem.”
The Curé d’Ars gave up his holy
soul to God in the arms of the faithful companions of his labours, the Abbés
Toccanier and Monnin. The life of extraordinary self-sacrifice, devotion,
prayer, charity, patience, humility, mortification, was over. He had fought the
good fight: he had finished his course: he had received his crown.
The emaciated body, seamed and
scarred with the glorious stigmata of penance, lay on his poor pallet, arrayed
by the hands of his beloved missionaries in the cotta and cassock which in life
he had never laid aside. One of the lower rooms of the presbytery was hung with
white drapery and flowers, and thither for two long days and nights came
pilgrims from every part of France to weep and pray around him, who, for the
first time, had no answering tears to give, but whose prayers, now ten-fold
mightier than before, were rising for them before the throne of God.
Notwithstanding the intense heat, not a trace of decomposition appeared upon
the body up to the time of the funeral. The venerable face lay uncovered, sweet
and calm, as if in a quiet sleep.
On Saturday the funeral procession was formed. From early dawn, dense masses of people had been collecting in and near the village till six or seven thousand were gathered together. More than three hundred priests and representatives of all religious orders came to pay their last tribute of reverence to the departed saint.
The procession halted in the square before the church, and there the Bishop of
Belley, in words which have echoed through many lands, told what had been the
life and death of this good and faithful servant of God. “The apostolate of the
saints,” writes Abbé Monnin, “ends not with their earthly life. Their relics
have a mission, too. We hope that from his venerated tomb Father Vianney will
carry on his work. Several instances of extraordinary graces and of bodily
cures, wrought by his intercession, have already occurred. We may not forestall
the judgment of Holy Church; but when it shall please Him to call this new star
to shine in the firmament of His Church, it shall answer, ‘I am here’. It will
be the hour of His Divine power, and many miracles will reveal it.”
Many hearts have thrilled at
the words of consolation which he spoke. Pray for us, then, O holy Confessor of
Christ, by the slow martyrdom of your lifelong toils for souls! Pray for our
priests, that their labours may be multiplied and their numbers and strength be
made equal to their labours. Pray for our unbaptized and neglected children, O
father of the orphan and outcast! Pray for those, who, from no fault of theirs,
have been brought up in heresy and schism, that their eyes may be opened and
that they may see the light and the beauty of God’s Church.
The Beatification of the
Venerable Jean Baptiste Marie Vianney was decreed by Pope Pius X in Saint Peter’s
on January 8, 1905, and his Canonisation was celebrated twenty years later, on
May 31st, 1925, by Pope Pius XI.
*****